Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' resignation Monday after
months of draining controversy drew expressions of relief from
Republicans and a vow from Democrats to pursue their investigation
into fired federal prosecutors.
President Bush, Gonzales' most dogged defender, told reporters
he had accepted the resignation reluctantly. "His good name was
dragged through the mud for political reasons," Bush said.
The president named Paul Clement, the solicitor general, as a
temporary replacement. With less than 18 months remaining in
office, there was no indication when Bush would name a successor -
or how quickly or easily the Senate might confirm one.
Apart from the president, there were few Republican expressions
of regret following the departure of the nation's first Hispanic
attorney general, a man once hailed as the embodiment of the
American Dream.
"Our country needs a credible, effective attorney general who
can work with Congress on critical issues," said Senator John
Sununu of New Hampshire, who last March was the first GOP lawmaker
to call on Gonzales to step down. "Alberto Gonzales' resignation
will finally allow a new attorney general to take on this
task."
Senator Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, added, "Even after all the
scrutiny, it doesn't appear that Attorney General Gonzales
committed any crimes, but he did make management missteps and
didn't handle the spotlight well when they were exposed."
Democrats were less charitable.
Under Gonzales and Bush, "the Department of Justice suffered a
severe crisis of leadership that allowed our justice system to be
corrupted by political influence," said Senator Patrick Leahy, who
has presided over the investigation into the firings of eight
prosecutors whom Democrats say were axed for political reasons.
Majority Leader Harry Reid said the investigation would not end
with Gonzales' leaving.
"Congress must get to the bottom of this mess and follow the facts
where they lead, into the White House," said the Nevada
Democrat.
Gonzales also has struggled in recent months to explain his
involvement in a 2004 meeting at the hospital bedside of
then-Attorney General John Ashcroft, who had refused to certify the
legality of Bush's no-warrant wiretapping program. Ashcroft was in
intensive care at the time.
More broadly, the attorney general's personal credibility has
been a casualty of the multiple controversies. So much so that Sen.
Arlen Specter, senior GOP member of the Judiciary Committee, told
him at a hearing on the prosecutors that his testimony was
"significantly if not totally at variance with the facts."
The speculation about a successor began immediately, and
included Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff; Asa
Hutchinson, former head of the Drug Enforcement Administration;
former solicitor general Ted Olson; and Larry Thompson, who was the
second-ranking official at the Justice Department in Bush's first
term.
Gonzales made a brief appearance before reporters at the Justice
Department to announce his resignation. "Even my worst days as
attorney general have been better than my father's best days," said
the son of migrants.
Gonzales told the Senate Judiciary Committee as recently as July
24 that he had decided to stay in his post despite numerous calls
for his resignation.
Several officials said the attorney general called Bush at his
ranch last Friday to offer his resignation. Bush did not attempt to
dissuade him but accepted with reluctance, they said. The president
then invited Gonzales and his wife to Sunday lunch.
Gonzales was one of the longest-serving members of a group of
Texans who came to Washington with Bush more than six years ago at
the dawn of a new administration.
Karl Rove, the president's chief political strategist, announced
his resignation last week. Presidential counselor Dan Bartlett and
Harriet Miers, the former White House counsel who was forced to
withdraw her nomination for the Supreme Court, left earlier in the
year.
(China Daily via agencies August 29, 2007)